1,897 research outputs found

    Critical Scaling Properties at the Superfluid Transition of 4^4He in Aerogel

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    We study the superfluid transition of 4^4He in aerogel by Monte Carlo simulations and finite size scaling analysis. Aerogel is a highly porous silica glass, which we model by a diffusion limited cluster aggregation model. The superfluid is modeled by a three dimensional XY model, with excluded bonds to sites on the aerogel cluster. We obtain the correlation length exponent ν=0.73±0.02\nu=0.73 \pm 0.02, in reasonable agreement with experiments and with previous simulations. For the heat capacity exponent α\alpha, both experiments and previous simulations suggest deviations from the Josephson hyperscaling relation α=2−dν\alpha=2-d\nu. In contrast, our Monte Carlo results support hyperscaling with α=−0.2±0.05\alpha= -0.2\pm 0.05. We suggest a reinterpretation of previous experiments, which avoids scaling violations and is consistent with our simulation results.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    Patriarchalstruktur und Kircheneinheit

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    Don't Pay Attention to the Noise: Learning Self-supervised Representations of Light Curves with a Denoising Time Series Transformer

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    Astrophysical light curves are particularly challenging data objects due to the intensity and variety of noise contaminating them. Yet, despite the astronomical volumes of light curves available, the majority of algorithms used to process them are still operating on a per-sample basis. To remedy this, we propose a simple Transformer model –called Denoising Time Series Transformer (DTST)– and show that it excels at removing the noise and outliers in datasets of time series when trained with a masked objective, even when no clean targets are available. Moreover, the use of self-attention enables rich and illustrative queries into the learned representations. We present experiments on real stellar light curves from the Transiting Exoplanet Space Satellite (TESS), showing advantages of our approach compared to traditional denoising techniques1

    The habitability of a stagnant-lid Earth

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    Plate tectonics is a fundamental component for the habitability of the Earth. Yet whether it is a recurrent feature of terrestrial bodies orbiting other stars or unique to the Earth is unknown. The stagnant lid may rather be the most common tectonic expression on such bodies. To understand whether a stagnant-lid planet can be habitable, i.e. host liquid water at its surface, we model the thermal evolution of the mantle, volcanic outgassing of H2_2O and CO2_2, and resulting climate of an Earth-like planet lacking plate tectonics. We used a 1D model of parameterized convection to simulate the evolution of melt generation and the build-up of an atmosphere of H2_2O and CO2_2 over 4.5 Gyr. We then employed a 1D radiative-convective atmosphere model to calculate the global mean atmospheric temperature and the boundaries of the habitable zone (HZ). The evolution of the interior is characterized by the initial production of a large amount of partial melt accompanied by a rapid outgassing of H2_2O and CO2_2. At 1 au, the obtained temperatures generally allow for liquid water on the surface nearly over the entire evolution. While the outer edge of the HZ is mostly influenced by the amount of outgassed CO2_2, the inner edge presents a more complex behaviour that is dependent on the partial pressures of both gases. At 1 au, the stagnant-lid planet considered would be regarded as habitable. The width of the HZ at the end of the evolution, albeit influenced by the amount of outgassed CO2_2, can vary in a non-monotonic way depending on the extent of the outgassed H2_2O reservoir. Our results suggest that stagnant-lid planets can be habitable over geological timescales and that joint modelling of interior evolution, volcanic outgassing, and accompanying climate is necessary to robustly characterize planetary habitability
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